Rothley railway station
Rothley | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| General information | |||||
| Location | Rothley, Leicestershire England | ||||
| Coordinates | 52°42′17″N 1°09′36″W / 52.7048°N 1.1600°W | ||||
| Grid reference | SK568122 | ||||
| System | Station on heritage railway | ||||
| Operated by | Great Central Railway (preserved) | ||||
| Platforms | 2 | ||||
| History | |||||
| Opened | 15 March 1899 | ||||
| Closed | 4 March 1963 | ||||
| Original company | Great Central Railway | ||||
| Post-grouping | London and North Eastern Railway | ||||
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Rothley railway station is a heritage railway station on the preserved section of the Great Central Railway's London Extension. Built to the standard island platform pattern of country stations on the line, it originally opened on 15 March 1899 and has been restored to late Edwardian era condition, circa 1910. The station is grade II listed.[1]
History
Proposed Swithland station
Rothley station did not feature in the original plans for the Great Central Main Line; a station was to be constructed at nearby Swithland instead. However due to pressure from the residents of Rothley, a station was opened at Rothley instead.[2]
Construction was started on the station at Swithland before the plans were halted: the staircase which would have taken passengers from road level to the platforms was built but later sealed off.[3] The location of the planned Swithland station can also still be seen as the track widens as it passes over The Ridings.[4]
Construction and Opening
Rothley station was built between 1897 and 1899,[5] opening to passengers on 15 March 1899. It was built party in a cutting at the north end and on an embankment at the south end. Platform access is via a set of stairs from the overbridge across the north end of the station.[5] The platform measures 441 feet (134 m) long and 33 feet (10 m) wide at its widest point.[6] A modest goods yard with a goods shed, weighbridge and coal store were provided on the east side of the station, with train and shunting movements controlled from a signal box a little to the south of station on the west side of the main running lines. A stationmaster's house at the north eastern corner of the site watches over the station from on top of the banks.[7]
Closure
The station closed on 4 March 1963 although trains continued to pass through until the line closed in 1969.
Preservation
The station was reopened on 23 March 1974 as part of the preserved Great Central Railway. The platform features a booking office, waiting room, tea room and toilet facilities.[8] In the former goods yard is an old coal and corn store which, from 2008 until 2026 was used as a tearoom.[9][10] The railway's carriage and wagon repair facility is located at the south end of the station.[11] The station is presented in the Edwardian era when it was operated by the Great Central Railway company. The two platforms at the station are not numbered, and referred to as the 'Up' and 'Down' platforms, as was the practice at the time. The station is entirely lit with gas lamps, as it never had mains electricity before closure by British Rail.[8]
Overseeing railway traffic movements in the area is Rothley Cabin, a signal box recovered from Blind Lane Junction in Wembley and erected facing the station on the west side of the line.[12] This signal box controls entry and exit to the southern end of the Great Central Railway's unique double track. In 2009 it was joined by an ex-GCR lamp hut taken from Whetstone railway station.[13]
References
Main Line is the quarterly news magazine of the preserved Great Central Railway. Rothley Station website - Under Development at https://web.archive.org/web/20180811113848/http://rothleygcr.co.uk/
- ^ Historic England, "ROTHLEY STATION (1391320)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 9 February 2019
- ^ "Disused Stations: Rothley Station". disused-stations.org.uk. Retrieved 16 March 2026.
- ^ "Disused Stations: Swithland Station". www.disused-stations.org.uk. Retrieved 16 March 2026.
- ^ "Swithland Sidings". Great Central Railway. Retrieved 16 March 2026.
- ^ a b "Rothley Station under construction". Railway Archive. Retrieved 16 March 2026.
- ^ Main Line, No.5, Summer 1971
- ^ Original surveyor's plan of Swithland Sidings and Rothley station, http://www.railwayarchive.org.uk
- ^ a b "Rothley". Great Central Railway. Retrieved 16 March 2026.
- ^ "Staff 'heartbroken' at Great Central Railway cafe closure". BBC News. 15 February 2026. Retrieved 16 March 2026.
- ^ "Ellis Tea Room Closure – Visitor Information". Great Central Railway. Retrieved 16 March 2026.
- ^ "History – Railway Vehicle Preservations". Retrieved 16 March 2026.
- ^ Blind Lane Junction and signal box during construction
- ^ "News | Great Central Railway". www.gcrailway.co.uk. Archived from the original on 27 May 2011.
External links
- Gallery of photos around Rothley station
- An image showing the newly constructed staircase at Swithland station
| Preceding station | Heritage railways | Following station | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Quorn and Woodhouse towards Loughborough Central
|
Great Central Railway | Leicester North Terminus
| ||
| Historical railways | ||||
| Quorn and Woodhouse Line and station open |
Great Central Railway Great Central Main Line |
Belgrave and Birstall Line open, station closed | ||
| Aborted plans | ||||
| Swithland Line Open and station Never Opened |
Great Central Railway Great Central Main Line |
Belgrave and Birstall Line open, station closed | ||